| Literature DB >> 25481036 |
Caterina Holz1, Andreas Busjahn, Heidrun Mehling, Stefanie Arya, Mewes Boettner, Hajar Habibi, Christine Lang.
Abstract
Reducing the amount of Helicobacter pylori in the stomach by selective bacterial-bacterial cell interaction was sought as an effective and novel method for combating the stomach pathogen. Lactobacillus reuteri DSM17648 was identified as a highly specific binding antagonist to H. pylori among more than 700 wild-type strains of Lactobacillus species. Applying a stringent screening procedure, the strain DSM17648 was identified as selective binder to H. pylori cells under in vivo gastric conditions. The strain DSM17648 co-aggregates the pathogen in vivo and in vitro. The specific co-aggregation occurs between Lact. reuteri DSM17648 and different H. pylori strains and serotypes, as well as H. heilmannii, but not with Campylobacter jejuni or other commensal oral and intestinal bacteria. Lact. reuteri DSM17648 was shown in a proof-of-concept single-blinded, randomized, placebo-controlled pilot study to significantly reduce the load of H. pylori in healthy yet infected adults. Reducing the amount of H. pylori in the stomach by selective bacterial-bacterial cell interaction might be an effective and novel method for combating the stomach pathogen. Lact. reuteri DSM17648 might prove useful as an adhesion blocker in antibiotic-free H. pylori therapies.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25481036 PMCID: PMC4415890 DOI: 10.1007/s12602-014-9181-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Probiotics Antimicrob Proteins ISSN: 1867-1306 Impact factor: 4.609
Fig. 1a Microscopic analysis of co-aggregation of Lact. reuteri DSM17648 with H. pylori DSM21031 in artificial stomach juice (pH 4), A H. pylori DSM21031 stained with hexidium iodide. B Lact. reuteri DSM17648 stained with CFDA. C Co-aggregate showing clumping of both strains. Bright field fluorescence microscopy (OLYMPUS BX60 microscope, 100-W mercury lamp U-RFL-T, Olympus, Japan), magnification ×1000. b Co-aggregation of Lact. reuteri DSM17648 with H. pylori DSM21031 is macroscopically visible. A H. pylori DSM21031; B H. pylori DSM21031 and Lact. reuteri DSM17648 co-aggregates; C Lact. reuteri DSM17648
Aggregation of H. pylori by lactobacilli is Lactobacillus strain specific
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| Co-aggregation of | Reference |
|---|---|---|
OB-LbHp-1 (DSM17648) | + | This work; ORGANOBALANCE strain collection |
OB-LbHp-2 | + | This work; ORGANOBALANCE strain collection |
OB-LbHp-3 | − | This work; ORGANOBALANCE strain collection |
OB-LbHp-4 | − | This work; ORGANOBALANCE strain collection |
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| − | DSMZ Braunschweig, Germany |
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| − | DSMZ Braunschweig, Germany |
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| − | DSMZ Braunschweig, Germany |
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| − | This work; ORGANOBALANCE strain collection |
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| − | This work; ORGANOBALANCE strain collection |
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| − | This work; ORGANOBALANCE strain collection |
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| + | This work; ORGANOBALANCE strain collection |
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| + | This work; ORGANOBALANCE strain collection |
aIdentified by API;b identified by 16 S rDNA sequence
Fig. 2Co-aggregation of Lact. reuteri DSM17648 with H. pylori DSM21031 was analyzed by flow cytometry (e). H. pylori cells were CFDA stained. Samples were analyzed using flow cytometry, and cell co-aggregation was quantified by determining the events with a high FL (>5 × 102, area within green frame). Co-aggregation was not observed when strains were analyzed separately (a–c) nor when a non-aggregating Lactobacillus strain was used as a control (d)
Co-aggregation activity is present in nonviable cells of Lact. reuteri DSM17648
| Culture | Lyophilized cells | Spray-dried cellsa | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Colony forming units (mL−1 or mg−1) | 2.0 × 109 | 3.0 × 107 | 0 |
| Co-aggregation | +++ | +++ | +++ |
aCells were spray-dried and incubated at 40 °C for 24 h
Fig. 3Scanning electron microscopy of co-aggregates of Lact. reuteri DSM17648 (blue) and H. pylori (red), a ×1,800 magnification; b ×11,000 magnification. Some images were colorized according to the bacillary or spiral shape to facilitate viewing
Lact. reuteri strain DSM17648 co-aggregates different types and species of Helicobacter, but not Campylobacter and bacterial representatives of oral or intestinal flora
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TType strains
Fig. 4Absolute 13C UBT values of individuals before and after treatment with verum and placebo
Fig. 5Linear regression between initial values and response to treatment (verum). Response is significantly stronger with increased basal H. pylori colonization level